Isolation Between Antennas of IMT Base Stations in the Land Mobile Service

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Isolation Between Antennas of IMT Base Stations in the Land Mobile Service Report ITU-R M.2244 (11/2011) Isolation between antennas of IMT base stations in the land mobile service M Series Mobile, radiodetermination, amateur and related satellite services ii Rep. ITU-R M.2244 Foreword The role of the Radiocommunication Sector is to ensure the rational, equitable, efficient and economical use of the radio-frequency spectrum by all radiocommunication services, including satellite services, and carry out studies without limit of frequency range on the basis of which Recommendations are adopted. The regulatory and policy functions of the Radiocommunication Sector are performed by World and Regional Radiocommunication Conferences and Radiocommunication Assemblies supported by Study Groups. Policy on Intellectual Property Right (IPR) ITU-R policy on IPR is described in the Common Patent Policy for ITU-T/ITU-R/ISO/IEC referenced in Annex 1 of Resolution ITU-R 1. Forms to be used for the submission of patent statements and licensing declarations by patent holders are available from http://www.itu.int/ITU-R/go/patents/en where the Guidelines for Implementation of the Common Patent Policy for ITU-T/ITU-R/ISO/IEC and the ITU-R patent information database can also be found. Series of ITU-R Reports (Also available online at http://www.itu.int/publ/R-REP/en) Series Title BO Satellite delivery BR Recording for production, archival and play-out; film for television BS Broadcasting service (sound) BT Broadcasting service (television) F Fixed service M Mobile, radiodetermination, amateur and related satellite services P Radiowave propagation RA Radio astronomy RS Remote sensing systems S Fixed-satellite service SA Space applications and meteorology SF Frequency sharing and coordination between fixed-satellite and fixed service systems SM Spectrum management Note: This ITU-R Report was approved in English by the Study Group under the procedure detailed in Resolution ITU-R 1. Electronic Publication Geneva, 2012 ITU 2012 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, by any means whatsoever, without written permission of ITU. Rep. ITU-R M.2244 1 REPORT ITU-R M.2244 Isolation between antennas of IMT base stations in the land mobile service TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 3 2 Scope .............................................................................................................................. 3 3 Related Reports and Recommendations in ITU-R ......................................................... 3 4 Definitions ...................................................................................................................... 4 5 Typical antenna configuration cases............................................................................... 5 5.1 Antenna isolation of space separated antennas ................................................... 5 5.2 Antenna isolation of multi-band antennas .......................................................... 5 6 Basic analytical methods for determining antenna isolation .......................................... 5 6.1 Horizontal space isolation calculation ................................................................ 6 6.2 Vertical space isolation calculation .................................................................... 9 6.3 Slant space isolation calculation ......................................................................... 10 6.4 Simulation evaluation of analytical formulas ..................................................... 11 7 Additional considerations for antenna isolation ............................................................. 13 7.1 Influence of objects near the antenna ................................................................. 13 7.2 Frequency dependency ....................................................................................... 15 7.3 Polarization ......................................................................................................... 17 7.4 Multiple interfering antennas .............................................................................. 17 8 Antenna isolation measurements .................................................................................... 18 8.1 Measurement methodology ................................................................................ 18 8.2 Measurement results ........................................................................................... 19 9 Spurious emissions, blocking and intermodulation interference effects ........................ 40 9.1 Spurious emission interference isolation analysis .............................................. 40 9.2 Blocking interference isolation analysis ............................................................. 41 9.3 Intermodulation interference isolation analysis .................................................. 41 2 Rep. ITU-R M.2244 Page 9.4 Isolation methodology ........................................................................................ 41 10 Summary and conclusions .............................................................................................. 41 Annex 1 – Isolation calculation examples ............................................................................... 42 1 Interference technical specifications .............................................................................. 42 2 The isolation requirements for System A ....................................................................... 42 2.1 The spurious emission isolation requirements for System A ............................. 42 2.2 The blocking isolation requirements for System A ............................................ 43 2.3 The intermodulation isolation requirements for System A ................................. 43 2.4 Isolation requirements for System A .................................................................. 43 2.5 Conclusion .......................................................................................................... 44 Annex 2 – Simulation analysis of analytical methods for antenna isolation ........................... 44 1 Models for antenna isolation .......................................................................................... 44 2 Method for analysis ........................................................................................................ 45 3 Results ............................................................................................................................ 47 4 Conclusions .................................................................................................................... 50 Annex 3 – Influence of objects near the antenna ..................................................................... 50 1 Example of a conductor mast’s influence on the isolation between two half-wave dipole antennas ............................................................................................................... 50 1.1 A scenario of two antennas sharing a conductor mast ........................................ 50 1.2 The results’ reference value for real directional BS antenna .............................. 52 Annex 4 – Theoretical derivation of the equation for vertical separation ............................... 53 1 Theoretical derivation for the formula of vertical isolation between two small dipoles ............................................................................................................................. 53 2 Theoretical derivation for the formula of vertical isolation between two half-wave dipoles ............................................................................................................................. 55 Annex 5 – Spurious emissions, blocking and intermodulation interference effects ................ 59 1 Spurious emission interference isolation analysis .......................................................... 59 2 Blocking interference isolation analysis ......................................................................... 60 3 Intermodulation interference isolation analysis .............................................................. 60 Rep. ITU-R M.2244 3 Page Annex 6 Glossary .................................................................................................................... 61 1 Introduction In this Report the isolation between co-located antennas and antennas in close proximity of IMT base stations in the land mobile service is investigated. The key benefits of having co-located antennas are as follows: – encouraging equitable reasonable competition; – reducing the number of steel towers or masts, mitigating the shortage of suitable sites; – reducing network building expense; – reducing visual impact. One must, however, also ensure that the interference between different systems is kept within acceptable levels. An important consideration when base station antennas share the same tower, rooftop, or other antenna sites, and are consequently separated by small distances, is thus the degree of isolation that can be obtained between the ports of two antennas. One of the main techniques to mitigate interference between radio systems is providing sufficient physical separation and proper orientation between antennas. This method has the attractive property of reducing all types of interference. Determining sufficient physical separation is however non-trivial, as the isolation is highly sensitive to antenna
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